The superhero film, a bleak and despairing story,
opened with a brief scene - Commissioner Jim Gordon (Gary Oldman)
was at an outdoor function at the Wayne Manor mansion celebrating
the memory of beloved Gotham City politician Harvey Dent ("I
believed in Harvey Dent"). It was eight years after Dent's
death (and after the events of the previous film).

The first action sequence occurred in Uzbekistan
as three hooded prisoners were driven to a CIA plane. With them
was Russian scientist Dr. Leonid Pavel (Alon Aboutboul), a nuclear
physicist whom the three had attempted to capture. When airborne,
the CIA officer in charge, CIA Op (Aidan Gillen) faux-questioned
the trio at gunpoint, threatening to execute them by throwing them
off the plane. The third one to be interrogated was bald-shaved
Bane (Tom Hardy), the muscle-bound mercenary ring-leader with a
pain-killer injecting muzzle-mask. Bane's plan was to be intentionally
captured, to find out how much Dr. Pavel had told the CIA about
them and to fake the scientist's death while on board their flight
before the plane was crashed. Suddenly, a larger C-130 air transport
plane dropped cables down to the fuselage (to tow it) during an
aerial assault and successful skyjacking by terrorist Bane's rappelling
commandos. During the rescue, a cadaver was brought on board and
used to transfer Pavel's blood in order to fake the scientist's
death (presumably, Pavel would be used later for Bane's evil purposes).
One of Bane's mercenaries was sacrificially left on the plane,
to have at least one body remaining as proof of the attack.

Gotham City was celebrating Harvey Dent Day.
Mayor Anthony Garcia (Nestor Carbonell) commemorated his "stand
against organized crime" due to the Dent Act, eight years
after his death. The city was now a safer place with an "historic
turnaround" after
the eradication of the mob and organized crime. The Wayne Foundation
was hosting the function, but Bruce Wayne was not in attendance.
In fact, the Dark Knight had disappeared over the past eight years,
and was now regarded as "a murderous thug in a mask and a
cape."
Batman had taken the blame for Harvey Dent's crimes, and was charged
with "murdering him (Dent) in cold blood." During the
speech-making, conflicted and guilt-ridden Commissioner Gordon
was planning to divulge "the truth about Harvey Dent" and
the 8-year conspiracy, but then changed his mind and put the speech
in his inner coat-pocket. He muttered to himself:
"Maybe the time isn't right."

[Note: The deceptions from the previous
film remained. Gordon knew the truth about supposed "white
knight" DA
Harvey Dent, who was not a crime-fighting hero who inspired the
tough-on-crime Dent Act, but a murderous, psychotic vigilante criminal
named Two-Face with half of his face disfigured. Dent's crimes
were covered-up and blamed on the real hero Batman, sending him
into hiding for eight years, causing him to be viewed by the
public as a fugitive thug.]

Rumors existed that self-tortured Bruce Wayne had
an accident, was disfigured or wounded (with a limp), and had locked
himself in the East Wing of Wayne Manor, in the manner of Howard
Hughes, living a life of "pain and tragedy." Loyal butler
Alfred Pennyworth (Michael Caine) and Wayne's business rival Daggett
(Ben Mendelsohn) noticed attempts to see reclusive Bruce Wayne
by temporary-hired maid service employee Selina Kyle (Anne Hathaway)
and philanthropic businesswoman Miranda Tate (Marion Cotillard),
a pretty Wayne Enterprises board member. During the function, feisty,
amoral, slinky high-society con-artist, pickpocket and cat burglar
Kyle brought a tray of food to Wayne's quarters
and stole his mother's pearl necklace from his "uncrackable"
safe. Her hidden objective had been to dust the
safe to acquire Wayne's fingerprints. She backflipped out a window
and discarded her maid outfit on the grounds of the Manor. Acting
cunning and seductive, she was given a ride by Congressman Gilly
(Brett Cullen), who soon turned up missing.

Idealistic and earnest Gotham City police patrol
officer John Blake (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) notified Commissioner
Gordon that the Congressman never made it home
from the Wayne Foundation function. Blake knew of the last confirmed
sighting of Batman eight years earlier before he vanished, and
had always pondered his identity.

Selina exchanged
Wayne's stolen fingerprints with assistant and hitman Phillip Stryver
(Burn Gorman), VP of Daggett Industries, in a Gotham City bar.
[Note: In exchange for assisting terrorist Bane, Daggett was anticipating
the take-over of Wayne Industries, via help from Miranda Tate.]
Selina had anticipated being set up and double-crossed, and brought
along abducted Congressman Gilly as her insurance policy. A shoot-out
broke out when she cleverly tipped-off police and a SWAT team (led
by Commissioner Gordon and his Deputy Peter Foley (Matthew Modine))
to their location. The police forces surrounded and attacked the
establishment. Congressman Gilly
was shot in the leg during exchanges of gunfire, while Selina pretended
to be a victim and evaded capture into the night.

Searching in the underground
sewers for the criminals, an ambushed and wounded Gordon was dragged
by mercenaries to meet with terrorist leader Bane and his underground
army in their new headquarters. The speech Gordon was to deliver
at the function was taken from his coat-pocket by Bane. (It exposed
the truth behind the events of Dent's death.) Although Gordon
escaped in rapid-flowing sewer pipe water, he required hospitalization
for his serious injuries.

Blake met with Bruce Wayne at Wayne Manor to ask
him to return to crime-fighting ("He needs you. He needs the
Batman").
Blake had correctly guessed and known Batman's identity from when
he was a young orphan at St. Swithin's Orphanage (that had been
funded by the Wayne Foundation, but was now underfunded) ("Right
when I saw you, I knew who you really were"). Blake told Wayne: "I
don't know why you took the fall for Dent's murder, but I'm still
a believer in the Batman even if you're not."

Alfred provided background on mercenary Bane: "Him
and his men were behind a coup in West Africa that secured mining
operations for our friend John Daggett." Daggett had employed
Bane and the mercenaries to secure diamond mining rights in West
Africa before bringing Bane to Gotham City, to help take-over rival
Wayne Enterprises. In the previous few years, the profits of Wayne
Industries had dwindled to nothing, due to Wayne's reclusiveness
and inattentiveness.

Donning a ski-mask to disguise his identity,
Wayne met with Commissioner Gordon in his hospital room, who assured
him that Gotham was imminently threatened by the evil Bane. Gordon
implored him to return as Batman:

Gordon: "We were in this together. Then you were
gone."
Wayne: "The Batman wasn't needed anymore. We won."
Gordon: "Based on a lie. And now there's evil rising from where
we tried to bury it. The Batman has to come back."
Wayne: "What if he doesn't exist anymore?"
Gordon: "He must. He must."

Wayne emerged out of hiding and attended a charity
ball, funded by clean-energy socialite Miranda Tate. She noted
that Wayne Enterprises had lost money after his failed investment
in a clean energy project. Afterwards, Bruce had became reclusive.
He danced and argued politely with Selina Kyle, who was looking
for a "fresh start" and claimed that a "storm" or
social revolution was coming - something she seemed to look forward
to. She was compared to a 'Robin Hood' who stole from the rich.
She whispered to him: "You
and your friends better batten down the hatches, 'cause when it
hits, you're all gonna wonder how you ever thought you could ever
live so large and leave so little for the rest of us." Then
after leaving, she impersonated being Wayne's wife with his
valet ticket and drove off in his car.

Wayne Industries gadget-guru and inventor Lucius
Fox (Morgan Freeman) described how Wayne's investment in the fusion
energy project had been "mothballed" - causing his fortunes
to crumble. At the moment, however, his majority interest was still
keeping business rival Daggett at bay (from aggressively taking
over the company) while he was working with wealthy partner Miranda
Tate on the energy program. Fox urged: "Show her the
machine" (a nuclear fusion reactor), but
Wayne rejected the idea. Fox convinced Wayne to see his other newest
creations in the Applied Sciences Division warehouse where secret
prototypes were being developed. He showed off the
latest (offscreen) - the Bat, a flying vehicle (which was available "in
black").

Bruce began to prepare to return
as the suited-up Batman, with a strengthened leg brace, and he resurrected
his Batman costume. Alfred revealed rumors about Bane. He
had been trained by Ra's Al Ghul, Bruce's own mentor. Bane was
a member of the League of Shadows, but then ex-communicated for
his extreme views. Bruce deduced: "The city needs me." Alfred
was pleased that Bruce was returning to normal, but worried that
Bruce was going too far by bringing back Batman ("I'm
afraid that you want to").

Bane and his group of mercenaries attacked the Gotham
Stock Exchange, and gained direct access to the online trading
desk. Bane was planning to use Bruce Wayne's stolen fingerprints
(obtained from Daggett via Selina Kyle) to have access and trade
stocks in Wayne's name, but then the fiber signal was cut. The
four suspects, with the aid of a cement truck blocking the way,
escaped the Exchange on motorcycles, taking hostages. During high-speed
pursuit led by Deputy Commissioner Foley in an underground garage,
as the lights powered out, Batman appeared on his Batpod vehicle.
With a long-standing hatred of Batman (believing that he had murdered
Harvey Dent), Foley ordered his men to focus their attention on
pursuing and killing Batman ("I'm gonna
take down the Batman!") instead of Bane. Batman was able to
down and confront one of Bane's thugs and retrieve a flashdrive
holding important information. When cornered in a one-way dark
alley, Batman surprised the GPD forces by flying out in the new
aircraft - the Bat.

In Daggett's penthouse headquarters, Selina Kyle/Catwoman
(now in her tight-fitting cat outfit and wearing bladed high-heel
stiletto boots) cracked his safe, but it was empty. Angrily confronting
Daggett and pinning him against a wall, she demanded her payment
for Wayne's fingerprints -- a USB "clean
slate" device
that would erase her existence from every database on Earth.
After fighting off Stryver and continuing to interrogate Daggett
on a scaffolding, Catwoman learned that the device didn't exist
(it was "a little too good to be true...it was a gangland
myth").
Batman appeared on the scene when she was surrounded by a group
of Bane's trained killers. As Batman rescued her and disarmed her,
he demanded: "No guns, no killing," to which she retorted: "Where's
the fun in that?" Together, they fled in the Bat (Catwoman: "My
mother warned me about getting into cars with strange men"). On
an abandoned rooftop, she revealed that she had sold Bruce Wayne's
fingerprints to Daggett, but didn't realize what would be done
with them. There seemed to be a link between the stolen prints
and the stock market assault.

After his return to Wayne Manor, Alfred resigned,
fearing that Wayne was endangering himself as Batman: "I've sewn
you up, I've set your bones, but I won't bury you....You see only
one end to your journey. Leaving is all I have to make you understand.
You're not Batman anymore. You have to find another way." To try
to dissuade and demotivate Bruce from continuing as Batman, and
to save his life, Alfred explained that before Rachel Dawes had
died, she had written a letter saying that she chose Harvey Dent
over Bruce. To spare him pain, Alfred said that he had burned the
letter. Bruce was incensed and ordered Alfred to leave the Manor:
"How dare you use Rachel to try to stop me!"

The next day's news in the Gotham Times, after
the stock market assault, was that Bane had placed risky trading
investments in Wayne's name (identity theft), in order to bankrupt
Bruce (by lowering the value of shares) - to force him to give
up his control of Wayne Enterprises to John Daggett. Wayne was
worried about the potential threat: "The weapons. We can't
let Daggett get his hands on Applied Sciences." Their worst
fear was loss of control of Wayne's clean energy project, in which
Wayne had invested a large amount of money, including a nuclear
fusion reactor. [Note: The potential danger was that the core of
the reactor could be modified to make a nuclear weapon.] Wayne
decided to trust Miranda Tate and get the board "behind her" so
that control could be kept out of Daggett's hands.

Fox invited Miranda to Wayne Industries to show
her the clean energy fusion reactor (capable of providing "free
clean energy for an entire city"), located in its protective bunker
under the Gotham River. Wayne was fearful that if it became operational,
it might endanger Gotham if terrorists got ahold of it. Miranda
stated that three years earlier, a Russian scientist (Dr.
Pavel from the opening sequence), had published a paper on weaponized
fusion reactions. She claimed the scientist died six months earlier
due to a plane crash. Wayne responded that there would be others
who would threaten its safe use: "Someone will figure out a way
to make this power source into a nuclear weapon." Miranda was entrusted
with control of Wayne Enterprises and the reactor. He stipulated
that nothing would be done with the reactor "until we can guarantee
its safety." If it couldn't be kept safe, he proposed to destroy
it: "Decommission it. Flood it."

At the next board meeting, Miranda
was appointed the new CEO of Wayne Enterprises, to stave off a
take-over attempt by Daggett. Daggett insisted that Bruce Wayne had
to resign and leave. After the meeting, angered Daggett accused
Bane of messing up their plan in taking over Wayne Industries.
Bane refused to be confronted:

"Your money and infrastructure have been important
till now...I'm Gotham's reckoning. Here to end the borrowed time
you've all been living on...I'm necessary evil."

He retailated by snapping Daggett's
neck and killing him (and placing his body in a dumpster).

In Old
Town, bankrupted Wayne met with Selina Kyle at her humble apartment
to ask her assistance in locating Bane - he promised that his "powerful
friend" (Batman) would give her what she wanted for the information
- the fictional clean slate device, although she was doubtful.
Meanwhile, the police were mapping the large sewer system networks
to try to locate Bane in the underground. Incapacitated Commissioner
Gordon appointed Blake to serve as a detective and report directly
to him, to bypass Foley's obsession with locating Batman.

At Wayne Manor, Miranda met up with Bruce and promised
that she would take care of his parents' legacy. She saw a picture
of Rachel Dawes, and noted that Alfred had left. They kissed, and
with the power cutting out during a rain storm, they had sex together
(off-screen). Later in front of a roaring fire, she spoke about
her poor background, and offered to fly away with him on her plane.
He postponed her suggestion: "Someday, perhaps. Not tonight." Soon
after, Wayne donned the Batman costume and met with Catwoman in
a subway tunnel, before she led him to Bane. On the way, she double-crossed
him. She entrapped Batman in the sewage drainage area, explaining
that it was the only way for her to survive: "I had to find
a way to stop them trying to kill me."

Batman was quickly overpowered by Bane during
brutal hand-to-hand combat (Bane had been trained well in the League
of Shadows, and he was continually being injected with powerful pain-killers),
as Selina watched from afar (and slowly regretted her decision
to betray him). Bane bragged to Wayne: "I am here to fulfill
Ra's Al Ghul's destiny." During their fight in pitch-black darkness,
Bane claimed: "I was born in it, molded by it. I didn't see
the light until I was already a man." He then revealed that
they were directly under Wayne Enterprises' secret armory ("I
will show you where I have made my home, whilst preparing to bring
justice").
He detonated the floor below the warehouse, sending Wayne's military
arsenal to their level. Then, he broke Wayne's back
over his knee, crippling him before he was dragged away. Bane removed
Batman's mask, revealing his identity to Catwoman.

Detective Blake trailed Selina Kyle (in a taxi) to
the Gotham City airport, where she attempted to flee, but was intercepted.
She was apprehended by Blake, cuffed and interrogated on Bane.
She answered a question about the evil villain: "You should
be as afraid of him as I am." When Blake also asked about
Bruce Wayne's fate, she answered that she wasn't sure whether he
was dead or not. Soon after, she was led as an inmate into Gotham's
correctional institution, Blackgate Prison.

Bruce Wayne was interred in a round, deep cylindrical
Pit prison, where Bane had been formerly imprisoned (it was where
Bane had "learned the truth about despair"). [Note: According
to legend related by an inmate, the underground Pit was Bane's
home when he was a child, and he was the only one to ever escape
from the Pit.] Bane described why Wayne hadn't been killed yet: "You
don't fear death. You welcome it. Your punishment must be more
severe." Psychological
torture of his "soul" was planned for him, as he helplessly
witnessed Gotham City slowly terrorized and destroyed:

"I will feed its people hope to poison their souls.
I will let them believe that they can survive so that you can watch
them clambering over each other to stay in the sun. You can watch
me torture an entire city. And then when you have truly understood
the depth of your failure, we will fulfill Ra's Al Ghul's destiny.
We will destroy Gotham. And then, when it is done, and Gotham is
ashes, then you have my permission to die."

The new CEO and Chair of the Board of Directors of
Wayne Enterprises was Miranda Tate, now that Bruce was ousted.
Lucius Fox had been demoted to company president. Terrorist Bane
interrupted the assembled board meeting, and took three individuals
hostage: Fox, Tate, and John Fredericks (John Nolan) who volunteered
himself. They were taken to the underground bunker in the sewers
where Wayne's nuclear fusion reactor was being kept. After threatening
Fredericks with a gun to his head, Bane convinced Miranda to have
Fox unlock and activate the nuclear reactor with her - as their
two handprints were read by a scanner. Dr. Pavel stepped forward
to convert the reactor into a 4 megaton nuclear bomb, to destroy
Gotham, by separating it. Bane ordered the nuclear core removed
from the reactor to a protesting Dr. Pavel, who predicted it would
decay and become unstable in 5 months - and then explode.

Meanwhile, as GPD officers swarmed into the sewers,
Blake was investigating Daggett's construction sites, and uncovered
four barrels of polyisobutylene and other barrels of motor oil
- ingredients to make explosive cement. He deduced that the lured
police were heading into a trap - the
concrete structure had been laced with explosives. An outdoor football
game in a stadium, between Gotham and Rapid City, was also threatened.

A chain of explosions completely and effectively
cut off Gotham:

almost the entire Gotham police force
of 3,000 men was trapped underground

the football field in the stadium was
destroyed

the Mayor and other politicians and officials
in a special viewing box were killed

major bridges were detonated that led
out of Gotham

Bane and his mercenaries marched onto the field and
ordered Dr. Pavel to explain the nuclear device that had been wheeled
out onto the decimated field. He called it a fully-primed neutron
bomb with a blast radius of six miles. After Pavel claimed he was
the only one who could disarm it, Bane twisted and snapped his
neck. He then announced to the stadium audience that his goal was
liberation - to "return control of this city to the people." Any
"interference from the outside world or from those people
attempting to flee" would cause an "anonymous Gothamite,
this unsung hero"
to trigger the bomb. He was claiming that
the detonator had been given to an ordinary citizen who would push
the button if they didn't comply with his rules. Martial law was
now in effect. The National Guard surrounding the city was told
that the bomb would be detonated if they entered the city. At
the same time, Blake had aided the rescue of Commissioner Gordon
from his hospital bed, who was threatened by Bane's assassins.

The next day outside of Blackgate Prison, Bane announced
that Harvey Dent had been a "false idol" to the "corrupt" city.
He read from Gordon's planned speech (including his resignation)
to prove his point about the cover-up. Therefore, he was able to
justify the release of the prisoners incarcerated due to the
Dent Act, who were denied parole. Bane continued his speech about
the liberation of Gotham:

"We take Gotham from the corrupt! The rich! The
oppressors of generations who have kept you down with myths of
opportunity. And we give it back to you - the people. Gotham
is yours! None shall interfere. Do as you please. But start by
storming Blackgate and freeing the oppressed."

Bane's men stormed the prison and freed the enslaved
prisoners, who were now recruited as his dangerously-armed army.
The riotous mob took over the city and raided the homes of
the rich and powerful, to be put on trial: "The powerful
will be ripped from their decadent nests and cast out into the
cold world that we know and endure. Courts will be convened. Spoils
will be enjoyed. Blood will be shed. The police will survive as
they learn to serve true justice. This great city - it will endure.
Gotham will survive."

In the Pit, one of the other inmates (a doctor)
told Bruce Wayne part of the story of Bane's
past. As a child, he was born in the Pit. He was the son of
a mercenary and his secret lover, the daughter of an angry
local warlord. She had the mercenary's child after he was exiled,
but she was condemned to be imprisoned in the Pit herself to take
the mercenary's place.

Wayne was hung by ropes to help him to
stand on his own power. As he was healing and becoming stronger
(through physical training), he had a vision of Ra's Al Ghul (Liam
Neeson). He believed that Ra's Al Ghul was the
exiled mercenary - whose child (and heir) was Bane (although he
was mistaken). The child was born to "restore balance to civilization"
as part of the League of Shadows, after his escape. In the belief
that the child had escaped from the Pit, Bruce was inspired to
also free himself by climbing out of the Pit.

Three months after the explosions rocked Gotham City,
Special Forces snuck in, posing as relief workers
providing assistance to the self-destructing city. The location
of the nuclear reactor core was unknown - it was
housed in one of three constantly-moving trucks with lead-lined
roofs. It was due to detonate in only 23 days. However, the Forces'
efforts to strategize against Bane failed, when someone sold them
out and they were killed. Meanwhile, Wayne made one final attempt
(without a rope, the same method used by the child) to escape the
Pit. At a ledge near the top after bats flew out of a hole in the
rock, he jumped forward to another protruding stepping stone and
made it without falling, before climbing out.

In Gotham, 'Judge' Jonathan Crane (Cillian Murphy)
presided over a kangaroo trial court of rich citizens. [Note:
Crane, aka Scarecrow, was a psychiatrist at the Arkham Asylum who
had conducted experiments on inmates in a previous Batman film.]
Daggett's assistant Stryver was given two sentencing choices: death
or exile, and he chose the latter. He was forced to cross the deadly
frozen river channel of ice surrounding Gotham. While
Stryver was walking across the ice, he fell through into the frozen
water. There was no time left - only 18 hours remained before the
unstable bomb would detonate.

Wayne met up with Selina Kyle again, not demanding
an apology but asking for help. He again promised her the "clean
slate" that he handed to her, if she would help locate Lucius
Fox (who could stabilize the bomb by reconnecting it to the reactor).
She reluctantly agreed to help. At the same time, Commissioner
Gordon and other officers (but not Blake) were apprehended by Bane's
forces, led to Crane's court, and ordered to die by exile.

Bruce
allowed himself to be captured in order to find Fox. With Selina's
aid, Fox and Wayne were both freed to retrieve a disruptor device
installed in the Bat. It would effectively block the remote triggering
detonator signal for the bomb (now set to explode in only 12 hours).
Costumed as Batman, Bruce then rescued Gordon and the others at
the frozen river. Batman told Gordon to light a flare and a fuse
- to ignite a flaming, giant bat shape on the top of a bridge,
surprising both Foley and Bane ("Impossible").

During a failed attempt to free the officers trapped
underground, Blake was apprehended by Bane's thugs. Batman freed
Blake as he was about to be executed, and suggested that he wear
a mask - a hint regarding their future collaboration:

Batman: "If you're working alone, wear a mask."
Blake: "I'm not afraid to be seen standing up to these guys."
Batman: "The mask is not for you. It's to protect the people you
care about."

A hole was blown in the ground with the Bat to free
the trapped officers, who now were organized as an army to conduct
an all-out assault on Bane, who was headquartered in City Hall.
Blake was assigned by Batman to help evacuate the city and get
people across the bridge ("Save as many lives as you can")
within 45 minutes. He also instructed Catwoman, with his borrowed
Batpod, to blast the rubble blocking an escape tunnel. She begged
him to escape with her ("Come
with me, save yourself. You don't owe these people anymore. You've
given them everything"),
but he refused.

Foley (in uniform) emerged from hiding in his home
to confront and attack the clamoring mob of Bane's mercenary thugs
and stolen Wayne Enterprise "Tumbler" tanks, as he led the charge
of a phalanx of police officers. Simultaneously, Catwoman blasted
a passageway to open the tunnel. Batman joined the fray as hundreds
of lives were lost, and fought against Bane in vicious hand-to-hand
combat on the steps of City Hall. At the same time, Commissioner
Gordon was in the process of locating the truck holding the nuclear
device, and Blake was instructing orphanage kids to alert Gotham's
citizens to evacuate by the cleared South Street tunnel or by the
bridge. Batman's punches damaged Bane's mask, enabling him to question
the subdued and pained villain: "Where's the trigger?" Bane admitted
that he had never escaped the Pit as the child of Ra's Al Ghul,
as Wayne had assumed. Hostage Miranda came up behind Batman and
stabbed him in the back, as a major reveal was divulged by her:

"But he's not the child of Ra's Al Ghul. I am.
And though I'm not ordinary, I am a citizen." (She held the trigger
device in her hand)

She identified herself as Talia, the daughter of
Ra's Al Ghul who had climbed out of the pit. She was named by
her mother before she was killed. Fellow prisoner Bane was her
"protector" who saved her from also being killed, and freed her
to escape. Miranda fixed Bane's broken mask as she continued her
story. Her father returned to exact vengeance, rescued Bane from
the Pit, and took him into the League of Shadows to be trained.
But Ra's Al Ghul could not accept Bane: "He saw only a monster,"
and Bane was excommunicated. She admitted her love for Bane: "His
only crime was that he loved me. I could not forgive my father
until you murdered him...I honor my father by finishing his work."
She had planned the Gotham operation with Bane, in honor of her
father, to seek vengeance against Batman who had killed her father.
Bane strapped a restraint around Batman's neck.

Gordon located the truck holding the device, and
jammed the trigger signal just as Talia, the "anonymous Gothamite,"
pressed the trigger on the detonator. She realized that Gordon
had blocked her signal. She claimed Gotham still had only 11 minutes
left. Miranda ordered a convoy to protect and secure the truck
holding the ticking time bomb, so that it could count down to detonation.
She bid Bane goodbye as he guarded Batman, while she took a Tumbler
vehicle to the truck holding the bomb. During the escort, Foley
was gunned down. Catwoman arrived on the Batpod and killed Bane
with cannon fire just as Batman was about to be executed. The two
then chased after Miranda, with Batman taking to the air in his
Bat, to try to guide the bomb truck to the entrance to the reactor
room where Lucius Fox was waiting to reconnect the core.
Batman fired upon the truck, now with Miranda in the driver's compartment
- and she was fatally wounded when it crashed.

As Miranda died, she told Catwoman, Batman, and Gordon,
who had emerged from the back of the bomb truck,
that Lucius Fox had showed her how to override the reactor, including
the emergency flood. Her remote activation of the emergency flood
mechanism, submerging the corridor with the controls, would make
it difficult to stabilize the bomb core in the reactor. The bunker
area rapidly filled with water, as Fox narrowly escaped drowning.
Her final words hinted that she thought her plan would succeed:
"There's no way this bomb will be stopped....Prepare yourselves.
My father's work is done."

Batman hooked a cable from his Bat to the nuclear
bomb, and flew it out over Gotham Bay, where it exploded safely
and harmlessly away from the city, and saved
Gotham and its citizens. As Batman prepared to leave, Gordon asked:
"Shouldn't the people know the hero who saved them?" Batman replied:
"A hero can be anyone. Even a man doing something as simple and
reassuring as putting a coat around a young boy's shoulders to
let him know the world hadn't ended." Suddenly, Gordon recalled
that he had been Bruce Wayne's hero from many years earlier, when
he put a comforting brown coat on his shoulders. It appeared that
Batman had sacrificed himself in the explosion.

Batman's heroic death was mourned and commemorated
at a short private ceremony at Bruce Wayne's gravesite near the
Manor, led by Commissioner Gordon, calling him
the true hero of Gotham. The reading was taken from A
Tale of Two Cities:

"I see a beautiful city and a brilliant people
rising from this abyss. I see the lives for which I lay down
my life, peaceful, useful, prosperous and happy. I see that I
hold a sanctuary in their hearts, and in the hearts of their
descendants, generations hence. It is a far, far better thing
that I do than I have ever done. It is a far, far better rest
that I go to than I have ever known."

The entire film wrapped up with a series of short
vignettes:

At the Bruce Wayne gravestone, Alfred tearfully
broke down and apologized for failing him.

Blake determinedly quit the police
force, in disgust.

A statue of Batman was unveiled at City Hall.

The proceeds of the sale of the Wayne's estate
were to benefit the city's at-risk and orphaned children. The
orphanage was now located at Wayne Manor.

Lucius Fox realized
that Batman had used the autopilot mechanism (patched and fixed)
on the Bat as he flew the bomb over the Bay - to escape the
explosion.

In a Florentine cafe-restaurant in Italy, Alfred
spotted Bruce having a meal with Selina Kyle.

Blake revealed
that his real first name was Robin.

Using the coordinates given
to him by Batman, Blake entered the Batcave.

Standing on the rooftop of the GPD building, Gordon
was surprised to notice that the Bat signal had been repaired.

Film Notables (Awards, Facts, etc.)

Director Christopher Nolan brought his 'Batman
trilogy' to a close with this highly-anticipated Batman
film in the series: The
Dark Knight Rises (2012),
following after his own Batman Begins (2005) and The
Dark Knight (2008). It opened on July 20, 2012 at the height
of the summer big-budget blockbuster season. Its debut was at
$160.9 million, ahead of its predecessor The
Dark Knight (2008) at $158.4 million. To date, it had the longest
run time of the Batman films, at 2 hours 45 minutes.

The PG-13 rated screenplay was written by Nolan with
his brother Jonathan from a story conceived by the director and
David S. Goyer. Themes and characters were interwoven into the narrative
from both previous
Batman films.

As a result of the movie theatre shooting massacre
in Aurora, Colorado during the midnight screening of the film,
Hollywood movie studios decided that they would not report the
film's weekend ticket sales out of respect for the victims - it
was a modern-day first for the film industry.

Some considered the Christopher Nolan
superhero trilogy tragically cursed, after actor Heath Ledger (portraying
the Joker in the second film The
Dark Knight (2008))
died of an accidental drug overdose just before the film premiered.

The film had many ties to Dickens and specifically
to his A
Tale of Two Cities and Oliver Twist novels -- references
to the French Revolution (and the mob pillaging homes of the
rich), pickpocket opportunist Selina Kyle similar to the cunning
Artful Dodger, a portrait of Napoleon in Catwoman's house, the
character named Stryver, Gordon's eulogy reading from the leather-bound Tale
of Two Cities book
at Bruce Wayne's burial, and the existence of orphans (Wayne,
Blake).

With a production budget of $250 million (estimated)
- the most expensive of the Batman films (to date). Its revenue
totaled $448.1 million (domestic) and $1,081 million (worldwide).

With no Academy Award (Oscar) nominations.

The Dark Knight Rises (2012) became
the second highest-grossing (domestic) Batman movie ever, the
third highest-grossing (domestic) superhero film of all time, and
the highest-grossing (worldwide) Batman film - it was one of only
a small group of films to reach $1 billion worldwide. However,
its box-office results were below expectations due to the mass
shooting at the Colorado screening of the Batman film that left
12 dead and 58 wounded.

Set-pieces: the opener: a spectacular
mid-air skyjacking by commandos (rappelling on cables from a C-130
Hercules transport onto a CIA plane below), the assault on Gotham
Stock Exchange and the subsequent pursuit, the explosions that
trapped police officers underground and destroyed a football stadium,
the mob's rampaging destruction of Gotham City, the all-out
war between the police and Bane's thugs in the streets, and the
chase after the bomb truck by the Batpod and the Bat culminating
in the bomb's explosion over the Bay.